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Script of Naration
America Becomes A World Power
1865. The United States had just concluded a devastating
civil war.
By the dawn of the 20th century, America will have
become a world power. But first the groundwork had to
be laid.
Industrialization exploded, ushering in a period of confidence and optimism that would define the American
character.
U.S. territories spilled out into the Caribbean and Pacific
in a burst of expansionism, forcing the U.S. to grapple
with its new role as an imperial power, a course that
would define America in the 20th century.
America Expands
European nations had long established imperial colonies,
the British in India, the French in Indochina, the Spanish
in the Pacific and the Caribbean.
In the 19th century, they turned their attention to Africa,
carving it up. Eventually, only Liberia and Ethiopia were
left as independent countries.
Russia had even crossed the Bering Strait and established
a foothold on the North American continent.
It was in this competitive climate that the United States
found itself. There were citizens who believed that if the
U.S. did not join the land rush, it would lose out.
What was the interest in expansion? There were three
reasons. The most important was economic. During the
Civil War, the U.S. had greatly increased its production of
manufactured products, dictating a desire to find new
markets abroad and a need for more raw materials.
The second reason was military strength. Some believed
that if the U.S. lacked powerful armed forces it would not
be able to defend its economic interests.
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The third reason was the belief in the racial superiority of
Anglo-Saxons, white people of English descent, especially the British and their American cousins.
In the late 1800s, many British and Americans believed it
was the "white races'" God-given duty to civilize and
Christianize the so-called "inferior" peoples of the world.
British writer Rudyard Kipling's poem "The White Man's
Burden" appeared in McClure's magazine, romanticizing
this idea.
Take up the White Man's burdenSend for the best ye breedGo, bind your sons to exile
To serve you captive's need;
To wait in heavy harness
On fluttered folk and wild
Your new-caught sullen peoples,
Half devil and half child.
The expansionist philosophy was far from universal. A
group of educators, writers and social activists, who
called themselves "Anti-imperialists," opposed expansion.
They believed that imperialism was a threat to the
American value system that a democracy should not keep
other countries in servitude.
Activist Jane Addams castigated Kipling. To "protect the
weak" has always been the excuse of the ruler and taxgatherer, the chief, the king, the baron; and now, at last, of
"the white man."
The Anti-imperialists also highlighted practical issues,
the huge cost of maintaining army and navy. And the fear
that expansion would take jobs away from U.S. workers.
The late 19th century saw three particularly key expansionist events that set an imperialist mood for the 20th
century.
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Opening the Trade With Japan
Among the staunchest advocates of expansionism was
Matthew Calbraith Perry, a career Navy man.
Perry recommended that the United States take "active
measures" to secure a number of ports in the Pacific,
where they could refuel their coal burning steamships.
The island nation of Japan seemed ideal. There was one
major problem. Japan had been closed to foreigners for
over 200 years.
In the summer of 1853, loaded with cannon, Commodore
Matthew Perry's flotilla sailed into Edo harbor, the gateway to Japan's imperial city.
In a rosewood box, wrapped in silk, Perry delivered a letter from President Fillmore asking the Japanese to open
trade, to give fair treatment to shipwrecked sailors and
allow the U.S. the opportunity to refuel in Japanese ports.
Along with the President's letter, Perry sent a cautionary
one of his own.
"Many of the large ships-of-war destined to visit Japan
have not yet arrived in these seas, though they are hourly
expected."
Perry's expedition wintered on the China coast, then
returned in February with eight heavily armed battle
ships. The threat of force proved to be enough to persuade the Japanese.
On Mar. 31, 1854, a treaty was signed that granted
Fillmore's requests, opening the ports of Japan for trade
with the U.S.
Matthew Perry's gunboat diplomacy sounded a wake-up
call for Japan - spurring them to strengthen their Navy,
and modernize their nation.
Purchasing Alaska
Another method of attaining territory was to buy it. In
debt from the disastrous Crimean War, Imperial Russia
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was open to selling their territory across the Bering Strait,
Russian Alaska.
Its vast untamed wilderness was ridiculed as "a dreary
waste of "glaciers, ice, white bears, and walruses."
But U.S. Secretary of State William H. Seward had his eye
on this piece of property since 1860. Seward saw Alaska's
strategic value for trade -- or in the event of war.
He also pictured potential in Alaska's resources - especially timber and furs.
Seward was so eager to secure Alaska, he entered into
negotiations with the Russian envoy, the Baron Eduard
de Stoeckl, without the go-ahead of the President or
Congress.
On March 30, 1867, Seward and de Stoeckl signed the
Treaty of Cessation.
The U.S. agreed to purchase Alaska from the Russians for
$7.2 million, only 2.5 cents an acre, though Congress had
yet to approve a single cent for the deal. Few Americans,
viewed Alaska as a bargain. The press mocked the purchase as "Seward's Folly," and "Seward's Icebox." But
nearly one year later, and after much political wrangling,
the U.S. Treasury finally wrote the check. And Alaska
became a U.S. territory.
Annexing Hawaii
While the acquisition of Alaska was a cordial affair, other
expansionist yearnings proved more troubling. Such was
the case in Hawaii.
In the early 1800s, missionaries from New England made
the arduous journey to Hawaii to spread Christianity.
They misinterpreted the Hawaiian culture - believing that
living in a paradise had kept the Hawaiians from progressing.
ÒInstead of grasping all he can get, he divides with his
neighbor, and confidently expects his neighbor to divide
with him."
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While the native Hawaiians were content to live in their
traditional ways, a growing influx of Americans was
busily building huge plantations, railways, docks, and
hotels. They soon dominated the island's economy and
made their influence felt in government.
In January 1891, Hawaii's native king Kalakaua died and
his sister Liliuokalani ascended to the throne. Although
she was educated in the U.S., she rallied against US rule:
"Hawaii for Hawaiians"
In 1893, American plantation owners plotted a revolt with
the help of U.S. Ambassador John L. Stevens. When the
U.S. battleship Boston arrived, Queen Liliuokalani saw
that resistance was hopeless and sadly surrendered her
throne.
The Americans assembled their own government with
Sanford B. Dole as the president. U.S. Ambassador John
L. Stevens reported to Washington. "The Hawaiian pear is
now fully ripe, and this is the golden hour for the United
States to pluck it."
President Grover Cleveland, however, opposed the
annexation of a sovereign nation and tried in vain to
restore Liliuokalani to the throne.
After William McKinley became president, Hawaii was
annexed in 1898.
The Spanish American War
In 1901, the influential Admiral Alfred T. Mahan became
a military advisor to President McKinley. Mahan was best
known for his book, The Influence of Sea Power upon
History, 1660-1783. In it, he illustrated how a nation's
power is directly related to its naval might.
He advocated updating the U.S. Navy fleet, establishing
Caribbean naval bases, building a canal across the
Isthmus of Panama, and increasing U.S. possessions in
the Pacific.
The second half of the 19th century found Spain holding
tenuously to their empire - Cuba and Puerto Rico in the
Caribbean, the Philippines and Guam in the Pacific.
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Meanwhile in the U.S., the expansionist mood was at a
fever pitch, with U.S. investments in Cuban sugar and
mining industries steadily rising.
In 1870, young Cuban José Martí had his first success as a
rebel. He penned a patriotic poem against Spanish rule.
The poem angered the Spanish government in Cuba so
much they jailed Martí for four months and sent him into
exile. Un-thwarted Martí continued his political writing calling for Cuban independence.
"It is terrible to speak of you, Liberty, for one who lives
without you. A wild best does not bend its knee before its
tamer with greater fury.
His tenacious spirit provided the Cuban people a national hero and hope of ending colonial rule.
In 1894, Martí organized guerrilla actions, destroying U.S.
owned sugarcane plantations, hoping to provoke U.S.
intervention in the Cuban plight against Spain.
Spain sent an army under General Valeriano Weyler to
crush the rebellion.
José Martí was killed -- but his revolution blazed on.
Frustrated by rebel successes, General Weyler ordered
300,000 Cuban civilians into concentration camps.
Thousands died and the revolution seemed lost. But aid
for Cuba arrived from some unlikely allies.
Rival newspaper publishers William Randolph Hearst,
and Joseph Pulitzer printed stories about "The Butcher
Weyler" not out of any democratic zeal - the stories simply bolstered newspaper sales.
They tried to outdo each other by printing sensational
pictures and stories that fed the hysteria against Spain.
Embellished stories like this became known as "yellow
journalism."
Painter, Frederic Remington was among the many
reporters sent to cover the war. In 1897, Remington
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arrived in Havana to find there were no battles, no cavalry charges, and no artillery barrages. With no story to
cover, he wired Hearst.
"Everything is quiet. There is no trouble. There will be no
war. I wish to return."
Some say Hearst replied: "Please remain. You furnish the
pictures and I will furnish the war." And war did come.
On January 25, 1898, The U.S.S. Maine steamed into
Havana harbor. Outwardly, its mission was to help quell
the conflict between the Cubans and Spanish.
On February 15, 1898 Captain Charles Sigsbee, was in his
cabin after dinner. His crew was below decks. Suddenly
an explosion ripped through the underbelly of the Maine
killing 266 men. The American headlines screamed "it
was a Spanish mine."
"Remember the Maine" became a rallying cry as the
American public was whipped into a frenzy. While the
U.S. Congress prepared a declaration of war against
Spain, forces were deployed to the Caribbean and the
Pacific.
Anti-expansionists protested loudly - they believed the
U.S. was in danger of becoming an imperialist nation.
U.S. Navy warships moved in to blockade the harbor of
Havana, Cuba's capitol and President McKinley issued a
call for 125,000 volunteers. Infuriated, Spain declared war
on the U.S.
Two days later on April 25, the U.S. reciprocated.
On the other side of the world, in the Pacific, Commodore
Dewey received orders to "seek the Spanish fleet and capture or destroy it."
The Philippines had been oppressed by the Spanish
crown for more than four hundred years, provoking
many revolutions.
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When the U.S. declared war on Spain, Filipino rebel
Emilio Aguinaldo saw a way for the Philippines to
achieve independence.
On May 1, Dewey surprised the Spanish fleet in Manila
Bay and sank all ten Spanish ships. During the next three
months, some 11,000 U.S. troops joined with the Filipino
Rebels, to defeat the Spanish. Aguinaldo declared
Philippine independence on June 12.
With the Philippines seemingly under control, U.S. troops
moved on to capture Guam.
Meanwhile, back in the Caribbean, the 9th Cavalry, a unit
of African American soldiers, arrived in Cuba. They
found the Army quartermasters totally unprepared for
the thousands of troops pouring in. Equipment was disorganized.
They were issued woolen uniforms in the tropical heat.
Both black and white soldiers were forced to live in
unsanitary conditions with poor rations. Diseases such as
yellow fever broke out and thousands were hospitalized.
Of the 5,400 deaths in the Cuban campaign, only 379 were
the result of combat.
Teddy Roosevelt quit his desk job as Secretary of the
Navy and became second in command of a volunteer regiment called the Rough Riders. They were a motley crew
of some 1,200 men aged 16 to 69. Their ranks included
the socially prominent, cowboys, musicians, and clerks.
In a critical battle, Teddy Roosevelt led the Rough Riders
on a charge up Kettle Hill. They came under heavy fire,
but were aided by the two regiments of African American
soldiers. They sacked Kettle Hill, but at great cost.
"What a sight was presented as I recrossed the flat in front
of San Juan. The dead and wounded soldier! It was indescribable!
In short order, the U.S. captured San Juan Hill and seized
the Spanish fort, while destroying Cuban ships in the
straights of Havana.
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With the situation in hand in Cuba and the Pacific, the
U.S. now turned 18,000 troops and a naval escort on
another Spanish colony in the Caribbean--Puerto Rico.
They landed at Guánica Bay, but before they could reach
the capitol city, Spain agreed to sign a peace treaty with
the United States, putting an end to all military hostilities.
The war was over in just four months. The truce with
Spain was signed on Aug. 12, 1898. "It was a splendid little war," commented soon-to-be Secretary of State John
Hay. It may have been a "splendid little war" but it left a
distasteful legacy.
On December 10, 1898, the Treaty of Paris was signed,
giving the United States the right to occupy Cuba with
full control over Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippines.
In the Philippines, Emilio Aguinaldo and his supporters
were angered as one colonial power was replaced with
another. On February 4, 1899, he declared war on the U.S.
forces in the islands.
It was a brutal war of massacre and torture, with U.S.
forces taking on an ugly role - forcing Filipino civilians to
live in areas where disease, hunger, and poor sanitation
killed thousands, much as the Spanish under "Butcher"
Weyler did in Cuba.
In the end, more than 20,000 Filipino rebels and some
4,000 Americans were dead.
At home, anti-imperialists complained that the war's purpose was to free Spain's colonies but the result was the
U.S. becoming an imperial power.
The famed American writer, Mark Twain sarcastically
noted, "There must be two Americas, one that sets the
captive free, and one that takes a once-captive's new freedom away."
Ultimately The U.S. Supreme Court decided how new
territories would be handled.
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Puerto Rico became an incorporated territory, allowing Puerto Ricans to become U.S. citizens and the right
to vote on statehood.
On the other hand, the Philippines remained unincorporated. In 1902, Filipinos held elections for their
House of Representatives - a first step on their long
journey toward independence.
While the Filipinos were struggling to gain independence in the Pacific, a similar battle was being waged in
the Caribbean.
In 1900, the Cubans wrote a constitution. Fearful that
another country would dominate Cuban affairs, the
U.S. Congress insisted that Cubans add provisions
known as the Platt Amendment, which limited Cuba's
rights to make treaties and permitted the U.S. to send
troops into Cuba to keep order.
Cuba became a protectorate of the United States.
China and the Open Door
As the 20th century opened, China was in turmoil.
Corruption was widespread, and opium addiction
was endemic. Rebellion, drought, and famine claimed
the lives of 60 million Chinese.
Foreign nations had divvied up the empire into
"spheres of influence," areas where one country had
exclusive rights to trade and invest, and had special
political rights.
With a coaling base in the Philippines, just 400 miles
from China, American businesses hoped to take
advantage of China's vast resources and sell to her
vast market.
John Hay, then U.S. Secretary of State, had a brilliant
idea. He sent letters to all the foreign powers suggesting an "Open Door" policy in China. This policy
would help U.S. businesses by guaranteeing equal
trading rights for all, preventing one nation from discriminating against another.
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At the same time, the Open Door policy maintained the
territorial integrity of China-an idea that appealed to antiimperialists at home.
Other powers politely put Hay off, saying that while an
Open Door policy is a good idea in principal, they had no
way of enforcing it.
However, Hay, despite the debate, boldly announced that
everyone had agreed to the policy. Everyone, that is
except China. Tsu Hsi, empress dowager of the Ch'ing
Dynasty, was eager to rid her empire of these foreigners.
In northern Shandong province, A secret society, known
as the Fists of Righteous Harmony, attracted thousands of
followers. They too wanted to rid China of foreign influences but they also sought to throw off the yoke of the
corrupt Chinese government.
Foreigners called members of this society "Boxers"
because they practiced martial arts.
Boxers believed that through meditation and discipline
they could cloak themselves in a mystical shield so foreign bullets could not harm them.
The Empress welcomed the Boxers as China's defenders
and turned their fury squarely against the foreign community.
In June 1900, the Boxers began their bloody campaign.
They murdered hundreds of foreign missionaries and
Chinese Christian converts, destroying millions of dollars
worth of property.
About 900 foreigners blockaded themselves in their
embassies for nearly two months - repelling waves of
Boxers.
Ammunition, food, and medical supplies were almost
gone. Then, shortly before dawn, loud explosions rocked
the city. Weary defenders staggered to the barricades,
expecting a final, overpowering Boxer attack.
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But instead, relief had arrived. Troops from Britain,
France, Germany, Japan, and U.S. fought their way into
Peking to free their countrymen and put down the rebellion.
The Boxers, believing they were impervious to bullets,
were cut down by the thousands.
On September 7, 1901, China and 11 other nations signed
the Boxer Protocol, snuffing out the rebellion.
Foreign Policy
Foreign policy at the turn of the century was characterized by three vastly different philosophies: Theodore
Roosevelt's "Big Stick" diplomacy, William Taft's "Dollar
Diplomacy," and Woodrow Wilson's "Moral Diplomacy."
Theodore Roosevelt abided by the African proverb
"Speak softly and carry a big stick." He applied this "Big
Stick" theory to American foreign policy, believing the
U.S. should take a strong role in Asia.
In 1905, Roosevelt intervened to end the war between
Russia and Japan over Korea and Manchuria.
When Japan was angered by racist sentiment in the U.S,
Roosevelt arranged a "Gentleman's Agreement." He
would see that Asian discrimination ended. But in turn,
Japan would have to limit Japanese immigration to the
U.S.
In a show of growing U.S. naval might, Roosevelt
launched 16 warships on a world tour. Painted brilliant
white, the flotilla was known as the Great White Fleet.
The tour was a triumph, the U.S. was regarded as the
most potent naval power after the British.
In the interest of connecting the Atlantic and Pacific
oceans, Roosevelt turned his attention to a narrow strip
of land in Columbia, the isthmus of Panama
In 1903, Roosevelt's Secretary of State John Hay failed in
an attempt to negotiate a treaty with Columbia for the
land.
22
But U.S. interests were not to be denied. Roosevelt
backed a Panamanian revolt and negotiated for the
Panama Canal Zone.
Work began. Massive locks were designed to raise ships
through the mountains and then lower them on the other
side.
A marvelous engineering achievement, the canal was
finally completed in 1914, just in time for World War I.
In 1904, Roosevelt wielded his "big stick" again, adding a
corollary to the Monroe Doctrine. Initiated in 1823, the
Monroe Doctrine established a policy to limit European
expansion into the Western Hemisphere.
Roosevelt's corollary went further - it stated that the U.S.
had the right to intervene militarily to keep European
powers out of the Western Hemisphere.
The Roosevelt Corollary was exercised the very next year
in 1905 in order to relieve the Dominican Republic's debt
to threatening foreign creditors.
In 1909, when William Howard Taft succeeded Roosevelt
as president, he established a foreign policy encouraging
U.S. investment in Latin America and China as way of
discouraging European investment. In contrast to
Roosevelt's "big stick policy," this new policy became
known as "dollar diplomacy."
As a result, U.S. owned businesses came to dominate the
economies of many small nations in Central America, the
Caribbean, and parts of South America.
Latin Americans reacted with anger and resentment but
they were powerless in the face of the U.S. military.
In 1913, Woodrow Wilson succeeded Taft as president.
Wilson offered, yet another approach to foreign policy.
He rejected "big stick" and "dollar diplomacy" in favor of
a "moral diplomacy," applying a moral standard and not
recognizing any government that is undemocratic or hostile to U.S. interests.
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To protect U.S. business interests, Wilson rallied troops to
stabilize Haiti, the Dominican Republic and Cuba, effectively turning them into U.S. protectorates.
Wilson encountered failure in his dealings with Mexico.
In the late 19th century, corruption in Mexico was prevalent, escalating with the assassination of Mexico's president Francisco Madero in 1913 and the assumption of
power by Victoriano Huerta.
Not wanting to support a "government by murder,"
Wilson refused to dignify Huerta's government. "I am
going to teach the South American republics to elect good
men."
President Wilson mobilized U.S. marines to capture the
port of Veracruz in Mexico.
Although split over allegiance to Huerta, Mexicans were
united in their opposition to U.S. invasion, and war was
barely averted between the two countries.
In 1916, when Mexican rebel Pancho Villa raided a U.S.
border town and killed U.S. citizens, an expeditionary
force of 11,000 men, under the leadership of General John
J. Pershing, crossed into Mexico to hunt for Villa.
After a year-long pursuit, Pershing's expedition is called
off. But the affair increased anti-American sentiments.
U.S. troops withdrew in 1917 and tensions eventually
eased between Mexico and U.S.
The United States forcibly entered the new century as an
imperial power.
In little more than a century, a nation founded on freedom
discovered itself embroiled in troubling relationships
with the peoples of its new territories and protectorates.
Despite the turmoil, America had forged from its historic
isolation, a newborn world power.
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